Twenty one dead, including foreign nationals, in a fire that devoured a building in Delhi. The United Kingdom has offered consular support, a reflex of its imperial past. But what does this tragedy tell us about the state of modern India?
Is this yet another symptom of the global decline we witness daily, a Third World tragedy replayed in a nation that aspires to be a superpower? The fire, likely caused by shoddy wiring and neglect, is a metaphor for a society that has abandoned the principles of order and safety. We look back to the Victorian era, when public safety was a hallmark of civilised governance.
Today, we see only chaos. The British offer of help is a poignant irony: the former colony, now a rising power, still relies on its old master in times of crisis. But this is not about colonialism, dear reader.
It is about the failure of modern bureaucracy, the corruption that allows unsafe buildings to exist, and the indifference of a globalised elite. The fire is a microcosm of our age: a catastrophe that could have been prevented, followed by a flurry of diplomatic gestures that change nothing. We must ask ourselves: have we learned nothing from the fall of Rome?







